I do not exist for my father: a case of Ficus religiosa

by Sujit Chatterjee, Manish Yadav, Sadaf Ulde

A young woman, age 29, came to us in
January 2012. She had swelling throughout her body, great fatigue with
lethargy, mood swings and depression, with a lot of gloom and negativity. With
this, she was gaining weight, her hair was falling out, and her skin was
becoming increasingly dry. Because of these symptoms, in 2011 she underwent
investigations and was diagnosed with borderline hypothyroidism (TSH - 5.47).
Her doctor advised her to start Eltroxin but she refrained from it.

At around this time, she also visited her
doctor with the complaint of very irregular menses, and she was diagnosed with
polycystic ovarian disease. Her gynecologist advised hormonal treatment but she
did not start the treatment.

Along with all of this, she developed
severe back pain. She was diagnosed as having nerve compression at L5.

Her job involves a lot of traveling,
which has been stressful for her. She feels “extremely drained, with no stamina
to do anything - I am just very tired.”

She says that she feels unable to take
decisions and has very low confidence. She used to feel confident about doing
presentations at her office but now she feels shy about it. She is often in
need of help at work, but feels unable to ask for help when she needs it. She
feels shy and hesitant about standing up for her rights.

She feels that her depression may be
connected to the stress of coping with her father’s severe depression: “Trying
to pull him out of it.” There are heavy family and financial responsibilities
due to her father’s disability, and she feels these have dragged her down.

In her childhood, her family enjoyed a
lavish lifestyle but suddenly her father had a business failure due to having
been cheated by his own uncle. All of his assets, including their home, were
sold. Then, from their high lifestyle they “went down to the lowest possible, a
complete shock for everyone.” She took it quietly but she did not understand
what had happened, and it left a big mark on her as well as on the rest of her
family.

As her father’s health was getting worse,
responsibility for the family’s welfare fell to her. She felt there was no
support from other family members, and this produced “a lot of anger and
negativity within me.”

She feels that her father does not care
for her and that he never thinks about her, as if she did not exist for him.
She said that “this situation came like a hit for me. I was completely broken
down.” Sometimes, she would not be able to sleep, even after taking sleeping
pills.

Once, during a big emotional upset, she
took forty sleeping pills in an attempted suicide, and was admitted into the
hospital. She said: “I was extremely hurt emotionally. I seriously didn’t want
to live at that time. I didn’t expect him to do anything in return or take care
of me. He is old, I understand, but the whole thought that for him I don’t
exist was a shock for me.”

When asked more about the experience of
the shock, she says that she was completely devastated, not wanting to believe that
she does not exist in her father’s thoughts.
She said: “His lack of interest in me and in my life was affecting me a
lot, and that was building up within me. Nothing would make me happy, I
couldn’t see my future; I had no vision. Something got into me and I was unable
to see my future. That felt claustrophobic, like suffocation.”

When asked about the experience of
‘suffocation’, she said that she wanted to be free to do things without
hesitation, wanted to breathe freely. She said: “In my thoughts and mind, there
is a lot of stiffness. I am holding myself back, and there is a lot of
heaviness inside, as if carrying tons of weight on me… There is a lack of
clarity in my thought process. A lot of thoughts are all confusing, jumbling
up, messed up inside me, and then, I am not able to express myself or ask
anybody for help. The whole mess is like a lot of pressure and heaviness just
increasing on me and I wanted to release that horrible feeling.” With this, she
feels she has no stamina to do anything; there is a complete lack of energy.

When asked to describe ‘heaviness’, she
says: “It feels like an inability to move the body freely, as if I am
carrying a lot of weight. Then, I want to lie down and I don’t feel like moving.
It feels as if tons of weight are tied around my shoulders. There are a lot
of strings attached to it. Lots of messed-up thoughts, making my head and
shoulders very heavy, with tiredness and pain.”

I then asked her to describe the pain.
She said, it is a “drained out, tired feeling as if stuck somewhere, confused,
and don't know what direction to move in. Which is the way forward?”

When asked about the opposite of this
situation, she said: “Being free”.

Asked to tell about ‘free’, she said that
‘free’ means “light as feather”. She said the experience of this is “not
holding to the past or future thoughts. The feeling would be wonderful and give
me freedom for movement. It would let me do things that I like. Then, there
will be happiness, cheerfulness, a serene feeling like music and dance.
Something like salsa that is very light, comfortable and happy. It simply moves
with the flow. A happy and high kind of feeling.”

She said: “I feel a lot of weight on my
shoulders and I feel like pushing it away, cutting the extra baggage, extra
weight.” She said she was trying to find her “intrinsic self”. When asked to
visualize her “intrinsic self”, she said: “Confident, a happy-go-lucky person
with a positive outlook. Not being bogged down with the situation, facing it
and moving on. I don't want to hold on to anything or be bogged down with
things that take a toll on me. That is suffocating, as heart and soul are not
synchronizing with each other.” She said the sensation of that was choking and
suffocating; unable to breathe freely.

I then asked about the feeling of
‘choking and suffocating, unable to breathe freely’. She said, “There is a lot
of constricting. They put pressure on me.” At this point, she made a gesture of
squeezing her hands together. When asked to describe the gesture, she said:
“There is a lot of pressure, a need to be free, open up. The feeling is of
being closed and stiff… Stiffness is like compacting - that is not allowing me
to be free. Stiffness feels like tight and rigid.”

When asked about the opposite of this, she
said: “Relaxed and calm, ease of movement, a comfortable feeling.” She said
that the experience of this is “relaxed, giving me a sense of freedom and
space. There is a need to move. It’s like there is a fight within yourself -
you want to move and be free. The constant feeling of fight drains me
completely, sucking all the energy from my body. Then, there is tiredness,
making me drowsy, completely drained out.” When asked about ‘drained out’, she
said: “The energy comes out. Completely dead from fighting, succumbing to the
fight.”

She recalled a recurrent dream from
childhood, in which she was walking for a long distance, through mountains,
through parks, just walking alone. She said, in the dream, the experience was
“I am lost. I don't know right path.”
‘Lost’ means “I don't know what direction I am walking to. I don't know
which is right and wrong.”

She said that in her dreams, she tends to
see different people who have no connection with each other, from her personal
life and from her professional life. “Everybody comes together in my dream, and
if you come back and think about it, there is no connection between them. I
don’t know how they know each other, or how they land up there.” When asked
about the experience of this she said: “I am just having some sort of flow
happening.”

She described another dream, in which she
has a house with a big gate and a path. “On the left side, there is a temple on
the property, and on the right side is a two-storey building, where the ground
floor is like a big hall or dining area; a place where people can sit and meet,
with a kitchen also on the ground
level.” She says: “I have always seen myself as a married person in this house,
so on the first floor there is this one section for my parents, another section
for my husband’s parents, and on the second floor is my room, where from one
end I can see the sea, and from the other end I can see a big garden and a
lawn, which is also part of the property.”.

When asked about this experience she said:
“It is beautiful, relaxed, happy, calm and serene. The feeling is of freedom -
nothing negative is taking control of me. It is a safe feeling, secure.”

She said the experience of ‘freedom’ is
“basically movement, and nothing is holding me back, nothing is putting
pressure on me, which makes me feel happy and light, like a feather, no extra
baggage. No heaviness.”

When asked about the worst situation in
life, she said that a man had molested her. At the time, she did not realize
what had happened, but when she reached the 7th standard, she shared
it with her mother. Her mother then told everything to her father. In that same
year, her father met the man who had done it, and her father behaved very
normally towards him, as if nothing had happened. That surprised her and she
felt very hurt and angry that her father could be so normal with him. She said
the experience of that hurt was “as if someone is drowning or sinking, and when
you drown you lose your breath. You want to cry but you are numb, no sensation,
dead. You want to breathe but you are suffocated, you want to die.”

When asked about her hobbies and
interests she said that she likes painting, listening to music, watching
movies, and going out with friends. In drawing, she especially draws houses.
She feels that may be due to dealing with the loss of her house in childhood,
as then she would draw “hearts pierced with an arrow, to indicate hurt, pain,
and bloodshed with tears.” Asked more about this, she said: “The tears signify
pain. Emotionally hurt, helpless, not knowing what to do in a specific
situation. I felt lost, lonely, with no one to help, neglected.”

Physical
generals

Food and drink: she is not fussy; she likes all
foods. She mentions that she likes chicken and seafood.Sleep position: on her side, with her hand under
the pillow.Menstrual history: it used to be
regular, but at present irregular due to PCOD.

When asked about her experience of the
case-taking, she said: “I feel lighter than before.”

Analysis

Themes of
the case:

Serene, calmHeavy versus lightCarrying the baggage of the pastSuffocating, choking, not able to breathe
freelyMolestationDreams: walking alone, lostNeglected, forsaken

I
was looking for a remedy from the plant kingdom, as we see sensitivity and the
opposite polarities of a sensation. The miasm is something from tubercular to
leprous, which we see from the feeling of no support, of being abandoned by her
father, attempted suicide, loneliness, claustrophobia, and suffocation. The
experience of feeling that for her father she does not exist is like a shock.
This again helps us verify that the remedy belong to the plant kingdom and is
not Hydrogen. Then, we hear that her experience of shock is heaviness, like
baggage, suffocating, and the opposite of it being light, serene, and calm.
This leads us to the Hamamelidae.

I was looking for a remedy with main themes of
suffocation, unable to breathe, ‘lost’, and strong issues with the father or
family members.

Desire to move, motion ameliorates Desire to be in open air, open air amelioratesFantasizing and imagination

Compensation

Adapting to living within a confined, limited
spaceBalanced (neither high nor low)

I had conducted a proving of Ficus religiosa,which belongs to the family Moraceae,
which is within the subclass Hamamelidae.
Now, if we compare some of the main characteristics of the case to the themes
that emerged in this proving, we can see striking similarity.

Characteristics of the case

Carrying tons of weightHolding baggage that I don’t want lost; no contactA lot of anger towards her father

Prover B –Calm feeling Prover D –Brush or touch of a man
made her abusive Prover E –Breathless feeling, >
open airProver G – I do not have friends; I am all alone in this world.
Strong need for Company. I want to go back to my friends (in another city). There
was a feeling of being alone that I don't have anybody with meProver D/E/F – Indifference towards mother
though she was sick. Had quarrels with motherProver K – Wanted to be aloneProver L – My friends are avoiding meProver E – I had gone to Brabourne Stadium; I
wanted to return but I was not able to find way home. A friend showed the way.

Prescription:
Ficus religiosa 1M, twice a day for two
days, and Sac lac, twice a day for
one month. The 1M potency was given as the case themes were matching
beautifully with the proving, as well as with the system understanding of the
remedy source.

Follow-up
on 05/04/12

Overall, the patient is much better.
Regarding her issues with her father she said: “Now, I don't hold on to any of
the grudges and just move on, as I don't want to carry any unnecessary thoughts
or, you know, any negative baggage with me. I just want to drop everything.”
(Resolving issues of the past was also an important theme in the proving.)

Prescription: repeat Ficus religosa 1M

Second
follow-up, 14/5/12

The patient brings a recent report
showing a TSH level of 3.81. She says: “I am doing much better than before.
There has been a lot of improvement. I am very happy that my thyroid is normal
now and I am not taking any allopathic medication for that. In the PCOD also,
there’s a lot of improvement and my menses are regular. I have lost 4-5
kilograms of weight, and I’m feeling very energetic. So overall, I am very
happy with the result. I am feeling happier and lighter.”

She reports that her mood is much better; now,
she feels happy with the challenges she faces at work. This is in spite of the
fact that stress is very high at her job and she is waiting to see if she will
be let go or not. She says: “From that point of view, earlier, I would have
been very, very depressed, which is not the case right now. I am quite normal.
I am facing it well, taking it well.”

She mentions that there are some minor things
which need attention, including constipation and occasional shooting headaches,
but she feels much less tired and her eating habits have improved. Also, she
reports that before the remedy she had a problem with bloating, and that is now
much better.

Prescription:Sac
lac, twice a day for one month

We saw the patient again on 21st January 2013. She has
been doing fine, and her improvement has continued.

Prescription:Sac
lac, twice a day for one month

Third follow-up: 5/7/12

The
patient’s menses are regular now. Her mood is good; she feels generally
cheerful. She says she is feeling much lighter and more energetic. She has been
more active.

She
recently got engaged to be married.

She
reports that she has a few new pimples. Some constipation remains.

Prescription:Sac lac

Follow-up: 6/6/13

She
is much better overall. Her menses are now normal. She has no complaints
related to thyroid. She no longer has depression. Her moods are very good, as
are her energy levels.

Her
engagement was broken off but she was able to cope very well with the
situation.

She
had a dream that she was alone and lost (this again confirms her miasm).

Comments

I
would have missed the remedy completely had I not recognized the Hamamelidae family sensation of
dragged down, heavy, enlarged, dull, open, free, etc. But this case is
instructive on a critical point in prescribing: when you come to a specific
family from the system understanding in a case, it is important to read all of
the available remedies of the family to look for the peculiar symptoms matching
the case. In this case, the peculiarities that stood out were the dream of
losing one’s way, feeling alone, and lost; a feeling of indifference toward
family members; and the feeling that she was stuck in her relationship with her
father, so until that was resolved, she could not proceed.